Do-it-yourself solutions from Strobist.com
May 19, 2007
Filed under FLASH, LIGHTING, PHOTOGRAPHY, THE WEB, TUTORIALS

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How to Make a DIY Ring Flash Tutorial You like Ring Flashes but you can’t pay the price? I have a solution for you, and it doesn’t involve stealing one from a store! Make your own for a very very cheap price,...
Using A Cooling Honeycomb As A DIY Photography Gridspot I just love gridspots. The amount of light control that a gridspot will give you is incredible. So, a while back I ordered some honeycomb grids from saxonpc. It is with two of those...
Flash Lighting in Studio Set Ups / Diagrams Here are a few lighting diagrams from recent studio shots : Bare monobloc studio flash positioned behind model, camera left. Monobloc via shoot-through umbrella close to model , camera right. 2 bare monoblocs positioned...
A quick start guide to the one light setup 1) Setup your single light source (It can be a continuous source, a low power strobe or a 100 watt flash). 2) Make sure you use a very large light modifier for your source,...
Strobist Lighting 102: 7.1 - Flash Zoom and Stone Soup. The fourth time-based manipulation I frequently use is zooming through the exposure. And last month we pulled that technique out of our as.. bag of tricks during the “stone soup” shoot in NYC. As...
Flash Modifiers. I have always loved using off-camera camera flashes and want to extend my arsenal of different flash modifiers. In this first round I will concentrate on the type you can mount directly on the...
Experimenting with Ring Flash as Fill Light For better or worse, my goal is for this experience to serve as a sort of template for how I approach a new lighting technique. This week deals with first attempts to reverse engineer...
New Macro LED Ring Light from Marumi. Kenro has announced the UK release of the LED8 Macro Ring Light from Marumi. This new addition to the extensive Marumi range has been specifically designed for macro photography. Built-in flashes are unsuitable for...
Lighting: Forget that Square Softbox The most popular studio lighting accessory? Hands down, the square softbox. Whether mini 12×12-inchers or 50×50-inch monsters, these boxy lighting tools are often the first thing to greet you when entering any portrait studio....
How to Choose an Umbrella Umbrellas are cheap, portable little light softeners. But there are enough choices available to make picking the right one a little confusing. Or worse yet, to end up with something that is completely a...